Amiet “Joy of my life” The Eduard Gerber Collection August 19, 2011 – January 15, 2012 To commemorate the 50th anniversary of Cuno Amiet’s death, the drawings, as well as woodcuts or water color, to oil paintings and Kunstmuseum Bern is presenting the Eduard Gerber Collection, sculptures. one of the most beautiful private collections of the artist’s work. The Eduard Gerber Collection mirrors this variety with over one Besides the collection of this great admirer of the artist, we are hundred works. The private collection is a testimony for his great also showing works from the Kunstmuseum Bern Collection that intimacy with the artist and a profound respect for him and his represent Cuno Amiet’s "official" oeuvre. The exhibition therefore work. Eduard Gerber (1917-1995) stemmed from a family that had offers a representative overview of Amiet’s work. no history in collecting art. He accrued his collection with the Cuno Amiet was born in Solothurn in March 1868 as the son of the wages he earned as a laboratory assistant. Eduard Gerber's col- secretary general of the Solothurn cantonal government. Fasci- lection testifies to the fact that it is not necessary to be enor- nated by painting, he decided subsequent to learning painting mously wealthy to establish an important art collection but pri- and art with his teacher Frank Buchser to deepen his knowledge marily must have the necessary passion for art and connoisseur- in the field by attending the Munich art academy. He met Giovanni ship. Giacometti and they became lifelong friends. Together they fur- Amiet’s works from the Kunstmuseum Bern Collection are inte- ther pursued their art studies in Paris in 1888. In 1892 Amiet left grated into the exhibition. Whereas Eduard Gerber’s private col- Paris and went to live in Pont-Aven, where he joined the artists’ lection was built up on emotional ties to the artist and therefore circle congregating around Paul Gauguin. During sojourns in other comprises mostly pictures that must be labeled as “intimate” and countries Amiet made valuable contacts, including Brücke paint- not meant for the public eye, the Kunstmuseum Bern owns largely ers of the artistic circle led by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner – considered his representative masterpieces – the masterpieces with which to be the pioneers of German expressionism. In 1893 Amiet re- Amiet could underpin his status as the new Swiss national artist turned to Switzerland. The turning point in Amiet’s career was his after Ferdinand Hodler passed away. Because both aspects are acquaintance with Ferdinand Hodler – his senior by 15 years – presented in the exhibition we can offer our visitors a general and additionally with the owner of a paper mill and art theorist overview of the artist’s oeuvre. Oscar Miller, who lived in Biberist, a town in the canton of Solo- thurn. After wedding Anna Luder, the daughter of an innkeeper, Stateroom Amiet moved to the Oschwand in the canton of Bern in 1898. Far Amiet experienced one of his most productive phases during and away from the great art centers of Paris and Munich Amiet worked after his stay in Pont-Aven. A key work from this time is the 1892 on his extensive oeuvre of paintings. portrait of an artist friend as a musician with a mandolin (Mando- In 1931 a fire in the Munich Glaspalast destroyed over fifty of his linenspieler) – the sculptor Charles Friberg who was born in early works in a retrospective on show there. The young Eduard Malmö. The musical instrument is hardly discernable, but, con- Gerber was greatly moved by the catastrophe and visited the art- trasting the monotone background, a mandolin strap stretches ist and his wife on the Oschwand – a region marked by a plateau across the shoulders of the young man while he thoughtfully landscape. This was the beginning of a friendship upon which the peers to the left. A painting executed in the same year, Breton- unique Eduard Gerber Collection was built over the years. In July ische Landschaft (Breton Landscape) evidences the experimental 1961 Cuno Amiet died, aged 93 years, in his adoptive home in the audacity of the artist, anticipating the first decade of the 20th Oschwand after an eventful life. century. Today Cuno Amiet is seen as having paved the way for modern Swiss art. There are not many Swiss artists who mastered such a Bildnis Anna Amiet in Gelb mit blumengeschmücktem Hut (Por- diverse oeuvre. Amiet’s pictures are marked by symbolism, Ju- trait of Anna Amiet in Yellow Wearing a Hat Decorated with Flow- gendstil, and also expressionism. They evidence his international ers) from 1906 is one of the highlights in the Eduard Gerber Col- relevance and his contacts to numerous artist friends, as well as lection. The artist painted three versions of this motif. In all of reflect his later life on the Oschwand. He applied a great variety of them he used a pointillist technique, exploring the interplay be- different techniques in his art. They range from pencil and paint tween background and the figure of the sitter as well as between representation and abstraction. We find the same neo- found in the 1935 painting Place de la Porte de Châtillon. It de- impressionism likewise in his 1905 Blumenstillleben mit roter picts the anonymous atmosphere of industrial and ordinary Paris Rispe (Flower Still Life with Red Panicles), a picture using close- in the 1930s. Amiet has the ability of alleviating the somber sub- set dabs of paint. The artist and his wife gave this small-format ject matter by playing with light and color. He also succeeded in still life, called “ds’Zärteli” (delicate thing) to Eduard Gerber as a transforming the thankless and banal everyday motifs into ten- Christmas present in 1942. The composition features a long and sion-filled paintings. The scope of variety in the city was also the delicate stem with red panicles, which contrast elegantly with subject of his figural pictures. Amiet portrayed Parisian personali- the light-colored and textured background. ties such as the proud Liette from 1932, and also ventured at- tempts at portraying more exotic subjects that were part and par- Amiet kept returning to the subject of apple and fruit harvest for cel of a cosmopolitan city like Paris. One of the outcomes was his almost his entire life. In the Eduard Gerber collection the subject portrait of a Japanese lady called Kikou Yamata (Bildnis der Jap- can be found in a considerable number of studies, as well as two anerin Kikou Yamata). This lady visited him on the Oschwand in pastel drawings, and the small-format red-green Obsternte (Fruit 1933. Harvest) from 1914 (in the basement). Two years earlier Amiet painted the large-format Obstlese (Fruit Harvest) (the so-called Vestibule in the Basement Bern version; Kunstmuseum Bern Collection). The work on the fa- The large-format painting Paradies (Paradise) from 1958 (on loan çade of the Kunstmuseum Bern, Apfelernte (Apple Harvest) from to the Kunstmuseum Bern), with its mystical air, can be seen as 1936, describes an ideological program of spiritual national de- succinctly representing Amiet’s late work in which his “colored fense and reorientation toward own traditions with which Swit- light” had been developed to perfection. He otherwise hardly ever zerland sought to draw a clear dividing line between itself and its introduced new motifs into his late work, but instead adhered to totalitarian neighbours. In such politically and culturally polarized depicting domestic atmospheres, such as we find in Tulpen- times, the ideologically charged picture portraying stocky rural strauss vor dem Atelierfenster mit Blick auf Winterlandschaft Bernese women while picking apples was not only interpreted in a (Bunch of Tulips in Front of the Studio Window with a Winter positive way. It was besmeared with pitch shortly after comple- Landscape View) from 1955 or Sonniger Morgen (Sunny Morning) tion and had to be restored. Since the summer of 2011 conserva- from 1960 (Kunstmuseum Bern). tion and restoration measures are being carried out on the sgraf- fito in order to preserve this cultural heritage. Basement The painting Toilette (The Bath) from 1908 testifies to Amiet as a There are a great number of very beautiful water color paintings Brücke painter. The largely parallel lines also reveal Vincent van in the Eduard Gerber Collection. The earliest work in the collection Gogh's influence. In taking up this subject matter he referenced is the water color with the title Strasse in München (Street in Mu- Manet’s or Degas’ bathroom scenes. The naked and shivering nich) executed 1887/88. The empty street and the schematic sil- child is Amiet’s adopted daughter Greti, and the figure wearing a houette of the city emanate a magic and dream-like atmosphere. blue gown is his wife Anna. In the work the artist focuses on the The water color was painted shortly after Amiet moved to the Ba- palpable nature and proximity of the household. Liegender Frau- varian metropolis in the fall of 1886. His Bretonischen Landschaft enakt (Reclining Nude) from 1912 is also regarded as Amiet’s con- (Breton Landscape) from 1892 is just as empty as the street in tribution to German expressionism. The young collector Eduard Munich. In the landscape the artist creates a wonderful tension of Gerber acquired this work, formerly belonging to Ferdinand Ho- contrasts by juxtaposing bright colors. dler, in 1943 with Professor Max Huggler’s help while it was on After Ferdinand Hodler died, Amiet became the leading Swiss art- show in a sales exhibition in the Kunsthalle Bern. Amiet continued ist. Now more than ever he strategically increased his claim to to innovatively develop his expressionism in paintings such as this distinction by exploring a new style in painting.
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